Obviously ||=
won't work
def x?
@x_query ||= expensive_way_to_calculate_x
end
because if it turns out to be false
or nil
, then expensive_way_to_calculate_x
will get run over and over.
Currently the best way I know is to put the value into an Array
:
def x?
return @x_query.first if @x_query.is_a?(Array)
@x_query = [expensive_way_to_calculate_x]
@x_query.first
end
Is there a more conventional or efficient way of doing this?
UPDATE I realized that I wanted to memoize nil
in addition to false
- this goes all the way back to https://rails.lighthouseapp.com/projects/8994/tickets/1830-railscachefetch-does-not-work-with-false-boolean-as-cached-value - my apologies to Andrew Marshall who gave an otherwise completely correct answer.
Explicitly check if the value of
@x_query
isnil
instead:Note that if this wasn't an instance variable, you would have to check if it was defined also/instead, since all instance variables default to
nil
.Given your update that
@x_query
's memoized value can benil
, you can usedefined?
instead to get around the fact that all instance variables default tonil
:Note that doing something like
a = 42 unless defined?(a)
won't work as expected since once the parser hitsa =
,a
is defined before it reaches the conditional. However, this isn't true with instance variables since they default tonil
the parser doesn't define them when it hits=
. Regardless, I think it's a good idiom to useor
orunless
's long block form instead of a one-lineunless
withdefined?
to keep it consistent.To account for
nil
, usedefined?
to see if the variable has been defined:defined?
will returnnil
if the variable hasn't been defined, or the string"instance_variable"
otherwise: